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U.S. Freight Industry Faces Worker Classification Battle and Parking Infrastructure Push

By MGN EditorialJuly 14, 2026 at 12:00 AM

A trucking contractor lawsuit in Illinois escalates to class action status while federal BUILD grants allocate $62 million toward truck parking solutions across five states.

## U.S. Freight Industry Briefing: Legal and Infrastructure Developments Two significant developments are shaping the U.S. trucking and freight landscape this week, with implications for supply chain operators, port drayage contractors, and logistics providers across the country. ### Illinois Contractor Lawsuit Gains Class Action Status A closely watched legal dispute over worker classification in Illinois has been elevated to class action status, according to FreightWaves. The lawsuit centers on the long-contested question of whether truck drivers should be classified as independent contractors or employees — a distinction with far-reaching consequences for compensation, benefits, and liability across the freight industry. The class action designation significantly broadens the scope of the case, potentially drawing in a larger pool of affected drivers and increasing financial exposure for the companies named. Worker classification disputes have become a defining legal battleground for the trucking sector in recent years, particularly following California's AB5 legislation and subsequent challenges that reverberated through port drayage operations nationwide. The Illinois case signals that this regulatory and legal pressure is expanding beyond the West Coast. For maritime-adjacent operators — including drayage carriers serving inland ports and intermodal terminals — the outcome could influence how owner-operator agreements are structured and enforced across the Midwest. ### Federal Grants Target Truck Parking Shortage On the infrastructure front, FreightWaves reports that federal BUILD (Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development) grants totaling $1.73 billion have been announced across 127 transportation projects, with $62 million specifically earmarked for truck parking improvements in five states. The chronic shortage of safe, accessible truck parking has long been identified as a critical bottleneck in freight movement, contributing to driver fatigue, hours-of-service violations, and supply chain delays. Improved parking infrastructure near major freight corridors and intermodal hubs is expected to enhance driver safety and operational efficiency for carriers supporting port and inland distribution networks. The federal investment underscores growing recognition at the policy level that surface freight infrastructure — including last-mile and drayage connectivity — is integral to the broader supply chain ecosystem that supports U.S. port competitiveness. Both developments reflect the ongoing pressures facing the trucking sector as it navigates regulatory uncertainty and infrastructure deficits that directly impact maritime cargo movement.
#trucking#drayage#worker classification#freight infrastructure#BUILD grants#supply chain#intermodal#port logistics

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